Chile wt/tpr/S/220 Page



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Tariffs


      1. Chile's average MFN tariff is 6 per cent. The tariff rate is virtually standard, although there are a few exceptions for some agricultural products, which are imposed at 12.5 per cent or are subject to a price band system, as well as some products that enter duty free (aircraft, boats and some capital goods). During the Uruguay Round, Chile bound all its tariffs at 25 per cent, except for some agricultural products, which were bound at 31.5 per cent at the end of the implementation period. Subsequently, in accordance with Article XXVIII of the GATT, Chile renegotiated the bound rate for sugar, raising it to 98 per cent and introducing a tariff quota.
        1. Structure and levels


            1. Since January 2003, Chile has had a virtually uniform MFN tariff resulting from implementation of Law No. 19.589 (1998), which provided for a unilateral reduction in the general tariff by one percentage point each year, from 11 per cent down to 6 per cent in 2003 (January). Chile grants at least MFN treatment to all its trading partners.

            2. Chile's customs tariff is based on the 2007 version of the Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System (HS 2007). In January 2009, the tariff comprised 7,715 eight‑digit lines (compared with 7,903 in 2003) (Table III.1). Ad valorem duty applied to all imports, with the exception of eight lines corresponding to agricultural products (wheat, wheat flour and sugar) to which compound duties applied under the price band system (see Chapter IV(2)(iv)). In January 2009, the ad valorem equivalent of the tariff applied under the price band system was 0 per cent for wheat and wheat flour and 6 per cent for sugar.25 There were no seasonal tariffs.

            3. In January 2009, there were three ad valorem rates: 0, 6 and 12.5 per cent. The most common rate was 6 per cent, which applied to 99.3 per cent of tariff lines, followed by 0 per cent (0.5 per cent of tariff lines) and 12.5 per cent (0.2 per cent of tariff lines).

Table III.1

MFN tariff structure, January 2009

(Percentage)



2009







1.

Total number of tariff lines

7,715

2.

Non‑ad valorem tariffs (% of all tariff lines)

0.1

3.

Non‑ad valorem tariffs without AVEs (% of all tariff lines)

0.0

4.

Tariff quotas (% of all tariff lines)

0.1

5.

Duty‑free tariff lines (% of all tariff lines)

0.5

6.

Average of lines exceeding zero (%)

6.0

7.

Domestic tariff peaks (% of all tariff lines)a

0.0

8.

International tariff peaks (% of all tariff lines)b

0.0

9.

Bound tariff lines (% of all tariff lines)

100.0

a Domestic tariff peaks are defined as rates exceeding three times the overall simple average applied rate.

b International tariff peaks are defined as rates above 15 per cent.



Source: WTO Secretariat estimates based on data provided by the Chilean authorities.

            1. In January 2009, the average MFN tariff was 6 per cent (Table III.2). Agricultural products (WTO definition) were subject to an average rate of 6.1 per cent, while the tariff on non‑agricultural products was 6 per cent on average. The highest rate (12.5 per cent) applied to 12 tariff lines for certain agricultural products, mainly meat and edible poultry offal. In fact, following the conclusion of the RTA with the United States of America, in 2004 Chile increased its MFN tariff on these 12 lines from 6 to 25 per cent, which will gradually be brought back to 6 per cent26; in January 2009, it was 12.5 per cent. In the same month, Chile applied a zero per cent tariff on 35 tariff lines for non‑agricultural products, including books and printed matter, electrical machinery and appliances, fire‑fighting vehicles, tanks, helicopters, aircraft, and cargo and passenger vessels, inter alia.

Table III.2

Breakdown of the MFN tariff, January 2009

Description

MFN

Average bound tariff (%)

Number of lines

Average
(%)
a

Range
(%)
a

Coefficient of variation (CV)

Total

7,715

6.0

0 - 12.5

0.1

25.1

HS 01‑24

1,484

6.0

0 - 12.5

0.1

25.8

HS 25‑97

6,231

6.0

0 - 6

0.1

25.0

By WTO category
















Agricultural products

1,045

6.1

0 - 12.5

0.1

26.1

‑ Animals and animal products

127

6.6

6 - 12.5

0.3

25.0

‑ Dairy products

51

6.0

6 - 6

0.0

29.8

‑ Coffee and tea, cocoa, sugar, etc.

172

6.0

0 - 6

0.1

27.6

‑ Cut flowers and plants

59

6.0

6 - 6

0.0

25.0

‑ Fruit, vegetables and garden produce

270

6.0

6 - 6

0.0

25.0

‑ Cereals

20

5.7

0 - 6

0.2

25.3

‑ Oilseeds, fats and oils and their products

103

6.0

6 - 6

0.0

29.4

‑ Alcoholic beverages and liquids

81

6.0

6 - 6

0.0

25.0

Tobacco

14

6.0

6 - 6

0.0

25.0

‑ Other agricultural products n.e.s.

148

6.0

6 - 6

0.0

25.0

Non‑agricultural products (including petroleum)

6,670

6.0

0 - 6

0.1

25.0

‑ Non‑agricultural products (excluding petroleum)

6,641

6.0

0 - 6

0.1

25.0

‑ Fish and fish products

510

6.0

6 - 6

0.0

25.0

‑ Minerals, precious stones and metals

401

6.0

6 - 6

0.0

24.9

‑ Metals

659

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

‑ Chemicals and photographic products

1,342

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

‑ Leather, rubber, footwear, and travel
articles

252

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

‑ Wood, wood pulp, paper and furniture

425

5.9

0 ‑ 6

0.1

25.0

‑ Textiles and clothing

1,114

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

‑ Transport equipment

320

5.5

0 ‑ 6

0.3

24.8

‑ Non‑electrical machinery

711

6.0

0 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

‑ Electrical machinery

412

6.0

0 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

‑ Non‑agricultural products n.e.s.

495

6.0

0 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

‑ Petroleum

29

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

By ISIC sectorb
















Agriculture and fishing

516

6.0

0 ‑ 6

0.0

25.3

Mining

119

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

Manufacturing

7,079

6.0

0 - 12.5

0.1

25.1

By HS chapter
















01 Live animals and animal products

604

6.1

6 - 12.5

0.1

25.4

02 Plant products

405

6.0

0 ‑ 6

0.1

25.4

03 Fats and oils

60

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

28.2

04 Food preparations, etc.

415

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

26.3

05 Mineral products

196

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

24.9

06 Products of the chemical and related industries

1,232

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

07 Plastics and rubber

304

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

08 Hides and skins

81

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

09 Wood and articles of wood

158

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

10 Wood pulp, paper, etc.

209

5.9

0 ‑ 6

0.1

25.0

11 Textiles and textile articles

1,093

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

12 Footwear, hats and other headgear

109

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

13 Articles of stone

187

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

14 Precious stones, etc.

60

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

15 Base metals and articles of base metal

637

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

16 Machinery and mechanical appliances

1,142

6.0

0 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

17 Transport material

333

5.5

0 ‑ 6

0.3

24.8

18 Precision instruments

258

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

19 Arms and ammunition

23

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

20 Miscellaneous manufactured articles

202

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

21 Works of art, etc.

7

6.0

6 ‑ 6

0.0

25.0

By stage of processing
















First stage of processing

1,111

6.0

0 ‑ 6

0.0

25.1

Semi‑processed products

2,281

6.0

0 ‑ 6

0.0

25.2

Fully processed products

4,323

6.0

0 - 12.5

0.1

25.1

a The calculations include the ad valorem equivalents of products subject to the price band system (an ad valorem rate of 6 per cent plus a special rate or a tariff reduction, whichever applies).

b ISIC (Rev.2), excluding electricity (1 line).



Source: WTO Secretariat estimates based on data provided by the Chilean authorities.


            1. There is no tariff escalation in Chile's tariff as the average tariff on fully processed and semi‑processed products is the same as that on products at the first stage of processing, i.e. 6 per cent. There is little dispersion in the tariff structure. In fact, tariff dispersion, measured by the coefficient of variation, fell from 0.2 per cent in 2003 to 0.1 per cent in 2009.

            2. Used goods are subject to a surcharge of 50 per cent on top of the general tariff or preferential tariff, whichever applies. Ambulances, armoured vehicles, highway cleansing vehicles, motor homes and other special vehicles do not have to pay this additional duty.
        1. Tariff bindings


            1. Chile's tariff bindings are contained in Schedule VII annexed to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade 1994 and also in the Schedule compiled prior to the entry into force of the Marrakesh Agreement.27 During the Uruguay Round, Chile bound all its tariffs (Chapters 1 to 97 of the HS) at a rate of 25 per cent, with the exception of certain agricultural products and six tariff lines that had been bound at lower levels prior to the Round.

            2. The agricultural products listed in Section I of Chile's Schedule VII were subject to a bound rate of 31.5 per cent at the end of the implementation period. These include wheat and wheat flour, various dairy products, oil seeds and oleaginous fruit, vegetable fats and oils, and cane or beet sugar. The rates bound at less than 25 per cent are: one bound line at zero per cent (bone ash), another line bound at 3 per cent (ships over 3,500 tonnes or 120 metres in length), another at 15 per cent (various worked carving materials) and three lines at 23 per cent (various types of turbine).

            3. After the end of the Uruguay Round, Chile renegotiated the bound rate for sugar pursuant to Article XXVIII of the GATT 1994. In November 2001, it notified that it had completed the negotiations, which had resulted in an increase in the final bound rate for sugar from 31.5 per cent to 98 per cent, and the introduction of an annual tariff quota of 60,000 tonnes at a rate of zero per cent.28 The amendments to Chile's Schedule of Concessions were certified and came into force on 30 January 2002.29 Pursuant to Article XXVIII.5 of the GATT 1994, Chile reserved the right to amend its Schedule of Concessions on a number of occasions. The most recent notification in this respect concerns the three‑year period beginning on 1 January 2006.30 At the time of preparing this report, a new notification by Chile in this regard, covering the period 2009‑2011, was being prepared.

            4. Chile did not follow the procedures to introduce the 1996 HS changes into its Schedule of Concessions. The changes introduced into its Schedule in accordance with the 2002 HS were certified in document WT/Let/583 of 29 August 2007.
        2. Tariff quotas


            1. Following the amendment of its Schedule of Concessions, Chile has had an MFN tariff quota for refined sugar since January 2002 (see Chapter IV(2)(iv)). Moreover, under its RTAs, Chile applies tariff quotas on imports of certain products such as vegetable oils, bovine meat, poultry meat, dairy produce and fish.
        3. Price band system


            1. Chile has a price band system based on international reference prices for imports of wheat, wheat flour and sugar. In accordance with this system, amended in 2003, specific duties are added to the ad valorem tariff when the reference price falls below the lower threshold price in the price band; in exchange, a tariff reduction applies when the reference price exceeds the upper threshold of the band (see Chapter IV(2)(iv)).
        4. Special tariff treatment


            1. Section 0 of Chile's customs tariff provides for special tariff treatment consisting of total or partial exemption from duty for certain users or purposes. This applies, inter alia, to imports of certain goods by government bodies, foreign service officials, international organizations, educational and social welfare organizations, religious communities and air and maritime transport companies, as well as to donations, samples of goods of no commercial value and certain automobile parts. Chile also gives tariff concessions in connection with the free zones (see (4)(iii)).

            2. In addition, under Law No. 20.269, which came into force on 27 June 2008, a zero per cent MFN tariff applies to imports of certain capital goods.31
        5. Preferential tariffs


            1. The important role played by tariff preferences in Chile's foreign trade continued to grow during the period under review. Since 2003, Chile has signed RTAs with the Republic of Korea, the United States of America, EFTA (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland), China, Panama, Peru, Colombia, Australia, Japan and Turkey, as well as an economic partnership agreement with New Zealand, Singapore and Brunei Darussalam (P‑4) and a partial scope agreement with India. Chile also has RTAs with Canada, Mexico and Central America32 and an economic association agreement with the EC. Chile grants tariff preferences to several countries under ECAs signed within the LAIA framework. In all, Chile has signed 20 trade agreements with 56 countries (see Chapter II(4)(ii)).

            2. The WTO Secretariat has not been able to prepare a statistical breakdown of the preferential tariffs granted by Chile under the RTAs it has signed because there is no information on the rates actually applied in 2009 under these agreements at the tariff line level.33

            3. A study of the effective tariff imposed on Chile's imports, published by the Central Bank of Chile, found that because an increasingly large proportion of these imports come from countries which have tariff preferences, the effective tariff rate showed a downward trend over the period 2000‑2005, falling to less than 2 per cent in 2005. The study also shows that capital goods were subject to the lowest effective tariff in 2005 (1.3 per cent), whereas higher rates applied to intermediate goods (1.7 per cent) and consumer goods (3.1 per cent).34


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